Category Archives: Business & Politics

Business & Politics

CN, CPKC workers approve strike mandate as possible work stoppage looms

The Canadian Press in the Financial Post
May 1, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada

Employees at Canada’s two biggest railways have authorized a strike that could see thousands of workers walk off the job in three weeks if they are unable to reach new deals on contract demands. The workers’ union, the Public Employee Federation, hosted a rally outside of the facility Wednesday. …About 6,000 employees at Canadian National Railway and 3,300 at Canadian Pacific Kansas City voted more than 97% in favour of a strike mandate. “After six months of negotiations with both companies, we are no closer to reaching a settlement than when we first began. Both companies are trying to strip our collective agreements of safety-critical rest provisions,” said union president Paul Boucher. …Boucher warned that a work stoppage would disrupt supply chains on an unprecedented scale, calling for a deal that does not “put profits over people.” CPKC said that the two deal options it has presented provide major benefits to workers.

Read More

Interfor Announces Lumber Production Curtailments Across All Regions of North America

Interfor Corporation
April 30, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

BURNABY, BC — Interfor announced plans to reduce its lumber production by approximately 175 million board feet between May and September of 2024, representing just under 10% of its normal operating stance. The temporary curtailments will impact all of Interfor’s operating regions, including the US South, through a combination of reduced operating hours, prolonged holiday breaks, reconfigured shifting schedules and extended maintenance shut-downs. The curtailments are in response to persistently weak market conditions. “Benchmark lumber prices have continued to weaken since the beginning of the year, from already unsustainably low levels, as available supply has outstripped product demand,” said Ian Fillinger, Interfor’s CEO. “This action… follows Interfor’s February 15, 2024 announcement to indefinitely curtail its sawmill operations in Philomath, Oregon. The Philomath sawmill had an annual production capacity of 220 million board feet and ceased operations and shipments at the end of March 2024.

Read More

RYAM to Suspend Temiscaming High Purity Cellulose Plant Operations in Quebec

Rayonier Advanced Materials Inc. (RYAM)
April 29, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

JACKSONVILLE, Florida and TEMISCAMING, Quebec — Rayonier Advanced Materials (RYAM) annouced that, effective July 2, 2024, it will suspend operations at its Temiscaming High Purity Cellulose (HPC) plant for an indefinite period… given current market conditions and high capital and fixed costs associated with the HPC plant. …The Temiscaming HPC facility has an annual production capacity of approximately 150,000 metric tons, with roughly 30% historically dedicated to specialty cellulose materials. The announcement will result in approximately 275 layoffs. “Persistent market weakness, uncertain availability of affordable wood fiber, and high capital and fixed costs have posed significant challenges for the Temiscaming HPC plant,” said CEO De Lyle Bloomquist. …This decision does not affect RYAM’s paperboard and high-yield pulp plants located adjacent to the Temiscaming HPC plant. These two plants, which are part of an ongoing sales process announced last October, remain competitive and will continue to operate at full capacity.

In related coverage: Uncertainty for the future of RYAM’s Témiscaming plant

Read More

Cash crunch puts Surrey’s Teal-Jones Group into court protection from creditors

By Derrick Penner
Vancouver Sun
April 26, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

Teal-Jones Group, the multi-generational B.C. forestry firm with three mills and some 400 employees in the Lower Mainland, filed for court protection from its creditors Wednesday as dwindling revenues left it without the cash to pay its bills. B.C. Supreme Court Justice Gordon Weatherill granted Teal-Jones a stay of insolvency proceedings, giving the company a chance to raise the cash it needs, including through the sale of assets such as land holdings on Haida Gwaii. Historically, Teal-Jones had been able to run profitable operations and reinvest those profits in the business but faced a growing cash crunch through 2023, company vice-president Gerrie Kotze said in an affidavit to Teal Jones’s court petition. …Teal-Jones was also the logging company at the centre of old growth logging protests at Fairy Creek on Vancouver Island, which the company said cost it $40 million. …Its U.S. holdings now consist of operations in Sumas, Wash., Virginia, Oklahoma, Mississippi and its 57% stake in the new mill under construction in Louisiana, which Teal-Jones has put up for sale as part of its court proceedings.

Read More

Trade Court Orders Feds To Rethink Canadian Lumber Duties

By Alyssa Aquino
Law360
April 23, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, United States

The US Court of International Trade ordered the US Department of Commerce to redo countervailing duties on Canadian lumber, saying the department must better explain its refusal to check whether suppliers for investigated companies had received government subsidies. …”Commerce has recognized that otherwise small changes may nevertheless be considered significant when they can cause such a change in the subsidy rate.” The judge further pointed out that some of the companies had received actual softwood lumber that fell under the duty’s scope from suppliers. [to access the full story a Law360 subscription is required].

Read More

Province funds up to $2 million for expansion of Chemainus-based wood company

By Robert Barron
The Chemainus Valley Courier
May 2, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

CHEMAINUS, BC — Brenda Bailey, BC’s Minister of Jobs, Economic Development and Innovation, visited the facility on River Road in Chemainus on April 25 to announce that the province is granting up to $2 million to the Chemainus-based wood-product manufacturer that builds and installs prefabricated wood-frame buildings for residential and commercial units. …The $2 million in funding that RAS will receive will be used for an expansion project that will use automation and advanced manufacturing to diversify the company’s products, including prefabricated floors, roof panels and stairs. The company’s expansion plans, which will see the creation of a new plant on a site that already has a number of high-tech buildings full of state-of-the-art construction equipment, will create 35 new full-time jobs, increase its output and contribute to the province’s goal of increasing the supply of new housing and the speed of building through more efficient construction methods.

Read More

Bring your exceptional leadership experience to BC’s Forest Practices Board

BC Forest Practices Board
BC Public Service
May 3, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

The BC Forest Practices Board serves the public interest as the independent watchdog for BC’s sound forest and range practices.  The Board is an Administrative Tribunal established in legislation; it operates independent from government ministries and must make its decisions in the public interest. The Board has a legislated mandate to conduct audits and investigations of forest and range practices and report its findings to the public. The Executive Director leads the delivery of the Board’s operational, administrative and financial responsibilities as a public sector organization. The Board’s programs have broad provincial implications. They can result in significant impacts and influence on government programs, policies and legislation, to the forest and range industries in BC, and the stewardship of forest and range resources.

Read More

Minister’s statement on the U.S. Department of Commerce’s anti-dumping redetermination

By Ministry of Forests
Government of British Columbia
May 1, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Bruce Ralston, Minister of Forests, has released the following statement in response to the U.S. Department of Commerce’s redetermination of its anti-dumping decision following October 2023 North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) panel ruling: “I am deeply disappointed with the U.S. Department of Commerce’s redetermination in response to the finding from the NAFTA panel that they had erred. We will continue to stand firm against unfair actions taken against our forestry workers. Yesterday, the U.S. Department of Commerce issued its redetermination in response to the NAFTA panel. I am disappointed with the Department of Commerce’s reissued decision. The only correct outcome would see a reversal of their original decision. Instead, the Department of Commerce has chosen to make minor adjustments that fail to address the NAFTA panel’s instructions. We continue to work … relentlessly pursue our claims… Rest assured that we will do everything we can to seek a better outcome for our softwood lumber exporters.”

Read More

Kitsumkalum First Nation buys Terrace sawmill, pellet plant

By Rod Link
The Terrace Standard
May 1, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

TERRACE, BC — The Kitsumkalum First Nation has purchased Skeena Sawmills, the Skeena Bioenergy pellet plant and all relevant assets in a complex sales agreement set out in an April 16 B.C. Supreme Court order. The $14.05 million purchase, effective April 30, ends an extended period of uncertainty over who would own the entities that were placed in receivership in September 2023. …In making his determination, Justice Paul Walker of the B.C. Supreme Court found that the sales agreement between the Kitsumkalum First Nation and court-appointed receiver Alvarez and Marsal “is commercially reasonable.” Kitsumkalum chief councillor Don Roberts said Kitsumkalum will manage the forest tenures that are part of the purchase package as an ecological whole and manage the tenures beyond logging for their timber value. …The Kitsumkalum revised offer also addressed long-term contracts between Skeena Sawmills and two logging companies. …Projected re-opening dates for the sawmill and pellet plant have yet to be set.

Read More

Paper Excellence launches third year of Engineer-in-Training Program

Paper Excellence Canada
May 1, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Paper Excellence has announced the launch of the third year of its Engineer-in-Training (EIT) Program. The company shares in a press statement that it is proud of its commitment to nurturing new talent in the pulp and paper industry. Over the past three years, Paper Excellence has welcomed 20 young EITs into its operations, with 15 choosing to remain and thrive within the organization. Recruitment begins by partnering with post-secondary schools such as, British Columbia Institute of Technology, University of British Columbia, Simon Fraser University, University of Toronto, University of Saskatchewan to attract the best new graduates. Those selected will begin an 18-month journey, rotating through different operations to gain experience by working with various teams at different mills and living in different communities. During this process, mentors will provide invaluable coaching, training, and support to ensure mentees receive ongoing feedback and guidance.

Read More

Merritt’s mayor dangles airport lands to keep Edison Motors in city

By Paul James
Radio NL – Kamloops News
April 30, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Chace Barber and Eric Little

The mayor of Merritt says new overtures are being offered to Edison Motors to try to keep the electric-hybrid logging truck manufacturer from leaving the city — including the possibility of a home on municipal-owned land. Mike Goetz says while he’s been acting as a facilitator between Edison and local land owners to find the space needed to fit the company’s needs, he says he’s also offered up 4 acres of refurbished land at the Merritt Airport which the company could use as a start-up option. “We are redoing our airport. We have … about 4 acres that we could lease to them to get them started,” Goetz told Radio NL. “Edison co-founder Eric Little said that would work. They’d be able to get about 25 trucks out a year.” Goetz suggests this would likely be a bridging solution to help keep Edison in Merritt while other opportunities potentially arise.

Read More

Canfor Southern Pine Grows in Arkansas with Acquisition from Resolute

Canfor Corporation
May 1, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Vancouver, BC – Canfor Corporation is announcing that it has entered into a purchase agreement with Resolute El Dorado Inc., an affiliate of Domtar Corporation, to acquire its El Dorado lumber manufacturing facility in Union County, Arkansas. The US$73 million acquisition, including working capital, will create synergies and vertical integration opportunities given its complementary geographic fit with Canfor’s existing operations in the region. The facility, which is close to key end-markets, produces dimensional lumber and specialty wood products. Its integration will capitalize on the Company’s regional manufacturing footprint to optimize product portfolio and maximize value. Leveraging Canfor’s experience and expertise, and with an anticipated further $50 million in planned upgrades, production capacity is expected to increase to 175 million board feet per year.

 

Read More

Forestry company Teal Jones files for creditor protection in B.C. court

By Jane Skrypnek
Black Press Media
April 29, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

The largest privately owned logging company in B.C. has filed for creditor protection, saying it no longer has the cash flow to maintain operations and pay off its debts. Surrey based Teal-Jones Group with operations throughout the province and the United States, filed its request in B.C. Supreme Court on April 24. The company has been in business since 1946 and said it’s been largely profitable over the decades. However, Teal Jones said in its filing, a combination of falling lumber prices and rising inflationary pressures since the beginning of 2023 have landed it in a place where it can no longer meet obligations to creditors on time. …As part of its application, Teal Jones has chosen international business advisory company PricewaterhouseCoopers Inc (PWC) to act as a monitor over the process. It will be PWC’s responsibility to report to the court on Teal Jones’ operations and help with developing a plan of arrangement.

 

Read More

Outlook for B.C.’s forestry sector in 2024 not so rosy

By Nelson Bennett
Business in Vancouver
April 27, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Russ Taylor & Paul Quinn

Canadian lumber output was down more than 20% for the better part of 2023, compared to 2022, and even lower in B.C. — a reflection of higher interest rates and muted global economic growth, according to a Global Consulting Alliance forest sector outlook. And the first half of 2024 may not be much better for the forest sector. Forest sector analyst Russ Taylor noted that lumber prices have recently fallen below US$400 per thousand board feet — the break-even point for many producers in B.C., as well as the U.S. “We’re sort of treading water,” Taylor said. “The U.S. south is losing money,” he added. “They’re below break-even. They’re in worse shape right now than B.C. mills are.” Lumber demand has not come back yet in 2024 the way he expected, Taylor said. …He expects more curtailments this year. “That will put supply and demand back into balance,” he said. “I think the second half of the year should be better.”

Read More

Teal-Jones files for creditor protection in B.C.

By Julia Foy
Global News
April 28, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

The company at the centre of the Fairy Creek logging protests on Vancouver Island several years ago appears to be in trouble. The B.C.-based company Teal-Jones is bleeding money and its many employees, are now facing an uncertain future. …“Teal-Jones is a major and important forestry company in B.C. and it also has operations in several American states,” Minister of Forests Bruce Ralston told Global News. “The purpose of the court application is to hold off the creditor actions until they can readjust some of their internal revenue sources.”

Read More

New manufacturing jobs coming to Vancouver Island

By Ministry of Jobs, Economic Development and Innovation
Government of British Columbia
April 25, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

New support for manufacturing businesses on Vancouver Island will create jobs, promote the development of made-in-B.C. products and strengthen regional economies and communities. Ron Anderson & Sons Ltd. (RAS) is a Chemainus-based wood-product manufacturer that builds and installs prefabricated wood-frame buildings for residential and commercial units. It will receive up to $2 million in funding for a project that will use automation and advanced manufacturing to diversify its products, including prefabricated floors, roof panels and stairs. RAS’s expansion to a new plant will create 35 full-time jobs, increase its output and contribute to the Province’s goal of increasing the supply of new housing and the speed of building through more efficient construction methods. “By expanding and modernizing our facility in Chemainus, we are not only creating new local jobs, but increasing supply and accelerating installation of much-needed wood frame housing across B.C., efficiently and in a sustainable manner,” said Jack Downing, president and CEO.

Read More

Minister O’Regan appoints Industrial Inquiry Commission on longshoring disputes at Canada’s West Coast ports

By Ministry of Employment and social Development Canada
Government of Canada
April 22, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Seamus O’Regan

The Government of Canada believes in collective bargaining. …This past summer, however, Canadians experienced an economic disruption that no single dispute should be responsible for. …Minister of Labour Seamus O’Regan announced the appointment of an Industrial Inquiry Commission on the underlying issues in longshoring labour disputes at Canada’s West Coast ports. The Commission will be chaired by Vincent Ready and will include Amanda Rogers as a Member of the Commission. The Commission will soon begin meeting with stakeholders and reviewing consultation submissions from relevant parties. The Commission will present its findings and recommendations in a report to the Minister in Spring 2025. …The goal of this Inquiry is stability. Canada is a reliable trading partner to the world. …But our credibility depends on the stable operation of our supply chains. We must do everything we can to preserve that stability.

Read More

2023 Sustainability Report Demonstrates Canfor and Canfor Pulp’s Continued ESG Performance

Canfor Corporation
April 22, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Vancouver, BC — Today, Canfor Corporation and Canfor Pulp Products Inc. jointly released their 2023 Sustainability Report. The report highlights the companies’ environmental, social and governance (ESG) activities and tracks performance against established goals. “While 2023 was a challenging year for Canfor, we continue to advance our sustainability strategy, which is a cornerstone of how we do business,” said Don Kayne, President & CEO of Canfor Corporation. “As we share the results of our sustainability report this year, I am incredibly proud of our people, who remain laser focused on safely delivering the quality products our customers expect while integrating sustainability into all that they do.” Highlights of the 2023 Sustainability Report include: Moving towards our goal of becoming net-zero by 2050; Progressing our diversity and inclusion initiatives; Maintaining responsible forest stewardship practices; and Advancing Indigenous partnerships.

 

Read More

Harrop-Procter community mill receives provincial funding for upgrades

By Tyler Harper
Nelson Star
April 22, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

A local community mill has received a provincial investment for renovations to help it diversify its products. Harrop-Procter Community Cooperative has been granted $215,000 from the BC Manufacturing Jobs Fund. The money will be used to upgrade equipment that helps the mill cut smaller diameter logs, and create three new jobs. The cooperative has managed the mill and logged the community forest above Harrop and Procter since 2009. Bill Macpherson, the cooperative’s president, said the money will be pooled with a further $750,000-$800,000 the organization is spending to renovate the mill. “It’s fairly substantial. It’s the new equipment that’s going to improve things that we can do as far as products and a roof linking a couple of buildings so the guys aren’t working out in the yard and the snow and the rain, and expansion of another building just to accommodate some new equipment.”

Read More

Boucher Bros. Lumber fined $102,000 after worker injured by wood planer

HR Law Canada
April 19, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada West

Boucher Bros. Lumber Ltd. has been ordered to pay $102,000 following a guilty plea for violating Alberta’s Occupational Health and Safety (OHS) Act. The penalty stems from a workplace incident where a worker suffered injuries after coming into contact with the blades of a wood planer. The incident occurred on Sept. 28, 2022, at the company’s Nampa, Alta., location. Initially facing 12 charges under the OHS legislation, the Crown withdrew 11 after the guilty plea was entered in the Peace River Court of Justice on April 15. Instead of a traditional fine, the payment will fund a mill safety education campaign managed by the Alberta Forest Products Association. This initiative includes the development of safety education videos targeting the lumber industry, utilizing the “creative sentence” provision of the OHS Act. This option allows for fines to be redirected to projects that enhance workplace safety.

Read More

Construction industry battles labour shortage, lack of diversity

By Matt Hutcheson
City News Kitchener
April 29, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

ONTARIO — With demand growing for new homes and infrastructure projects, construction companies are finding it increasingly difficult to find enough workers. The number of construction workers has been slowly declining for several years, made worse by the pandemic. …The Canadian Home Builders Association has estimated nearly one-quarter of residential construction workers plan to retire in the next decade. And experts say there aren’t enough people in line to fill those jobs. “This is a crisis, as it relates to talent,” Jeff MacIntyre, President of Grand River Construction Association said. MacIntyre said his organization is actively looking at ways to diversify its workforce and make it more attractive to different demographics, particularly women. MacIntyre believes there also needs to be a shift in attitudes towards skilled trades.

Read More

‘We will leave no stone unturned’: forestry minister on the Terrace Bay mill

By Austin Campbell
Northern Ontario Business
April 29, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

TERRACE BAY, Ontario — The provincial government is providing some clarity in the face of questions surrounding the idling of Terrace Bay’s mill. Ontario’s minister of natural resources and forestry, Graydon Smith provided updates. It was earlier this month Premier Doug Ford… seemingly implying the plan was to close the mill for good. Smith, however, indicated that they have not given up on the possibility of reopening the mill. …Smith indicated that discussions between Aditya Birla Group and potential buyers are “ongoing” and, although the province’s involvement in those discussions is limited, he and his ministry are doing everything they can.” …Mayor Paul Malashewski alluded to the fact that time is of the essence, with sawmills in White River and Hornepayne — which used to send their wood chips to Terrace Bay —experiencing a backlog. “Sooner or later, the sawmills are going to have to go down, too,” Malashewski said.

Read More

Gordon Murray named 2024 Canadian Biomass Champion of the Year

By Canadian Biomass
Wood Pellet Association of Canada
April 25, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: Canada, Canada East

Gordon Murray

Gordon Murray’s path from a forestry operations manager to an acclaimed leader in the bioenergy sector as executive-director of the Wood Pellet Association of Canada (WPAC) reflects a career marked by significant transitions and a passion for sustainability. Murray was honoured as the 2024 Champion of the Year at the Canadian Biomass Awards. After graduating in 1982 with a Bachelor of Science in Forestry and qualifying as a registered professional forester, Murray’s early career revolved around forest operations for leading lumber manufacturers in British Columbia…. Under his leadership, WPAC has not only seen substantial growth but has also embraced rigorous safety and sustainability standards. “I am very gratified to have been part of the movement to demonstrate the sustainability credentials of our industry,” said Murray. Murray remains optimistic about the future of bioenergy, acknowledging both its necessity and the challenges it faces.

Read More

US Home Builders Say Policymakers Have The Power To Ease Affordability

By Erica Drzwiecki
The National Mortgage Professional
May 1, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States

With housing affordability having reached crisis levels nationally, America’s home builders are stepping in with a formula they believe will provide real solutions. NAHB unveiled a 10-point plan to address the nation’s estimated 1.5 million shortage in housing units, by removing barriers that hinder new home construction. …The trade association has called for federal, state and local governments to eliminate excessive regulations and promote careers in the skilled trades through job placement, training and expanded work visa programs to meet the demand for labor. …With shelter inflation, or the cost of rent and homeownership, now above 5%, home builders say fixing supply chains that tie up building materials and inflate costs is necessary to ease price spikes. They suggest ending tariffs on Canadian lumber shipments and increasing the domestic supply of timber from federally owned lands in an environmentally responsible manner.

Read More

Accelerating Momentum: The Softwood Lumber Board Releases 2023 Annual Report

Softwood Lumber Board
April 30, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States

The Softwood Lumber Board (SLB) recently published its 2023 Annual Report, which details the organization’s impact generating more softwood lumber demand by expanding new and emerging markets and protecting existing markets. “Through its direct investments and the efforts of our funded programs—the AWC, Think Wood, and WoodWorks—the SLB delivered another strong year for demand growth and impact for the softwood lumber industry, generating 1.9 billion board feet in incremental demand in 2023,” said SLB President & CEO Cees de Jager. “Challenging markets, particularly in the non-residential segment, have required developers to differentiate their projects, and converting them to wood has enabled them to do so, allowing them to benefit from lumber’s economic and environmental value proposition. The impact of the increase in demand for wood and diversification away from other materials resulted in a total carbon benefit—stored and avoided—of 5 million metric tons of CO2 in 2023.”

Read More

Galleher Celebrates Jon Roy Reid’s Induction into National Wood Flooring Association Hall of Fame

Hardwood Floors Magazine
April 25, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States

Jon Roy Reid

Jon Roy Reid, president of Trinity Hardwood Distributors, Galleher’s southwestern hub, has been inducted into the prestigious National Wood Flooring Association (NWFA) Hall of Fame. This honor recognizes Reid’s exceptional contributions to the hardwood flooring industry, spanning more than five decades of dedication, innovation, and leadership. The heritage of Trinity Hardwood Distributors dates back to the founding fathers of the NWFA. Reid, a third-generation hardwood master, began his journey in the flooring industry at the age of 13, working for his family’s business, Trinity Floor. In 1977, he founded Trinity Hardwood Distributors, transforming it into one of Texas’s largest providers of unfinished hardwood. …His induction into the NWFA Hall of Fame is a testament to his remarkable achievements and lasting impact.

Read More

Californians are protecting themselves from wildfire. Why is there still an insurance crisis?

By Levi Sumagaysay
The Redding Record Searchlight
May 2, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US West

Spend any time thinking or talking about insurance in California these days and you’re bound to hear the word “mitigation.”  Fire officials, lawmakers, insurance agents, and others are asking homeowners to help lower the risk of devastating wildfires by making improvements to their properties—in some cases at great expense—and often in the context of trying to keep their insurance policies. The state has spent about $3.7 billion on forest management in the past seven years. Communities, fire districts, and others are doing their part, too. But some insurance companies citing growing risks and costs have paused or stopped writing new policies in California, causing a crisis of home-insurance affordability and availability. Some homeowners have seen their premiums spike or are being priced out, while others have been forced to turn to the ever-growing FAIR Plan, the insurer of last resort that offers less coverage but higher insurance premiums anyway.

Read More

Wood products closures have ripple effects on Montana’s timber economy

By Griffen Smith
Helena Independent Record
April 26, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US West

State and federal timberland around central Montana could bring in less money as the price for transporting logs increases, a trend that has been growing as fewer mills operate near the state’s expansive forests. Timber sales around Seeley Lake could drop the most. Pyramid Mountain Lumber, the town’s mill, plans to close next month unless a new buyer helps the business stay open. Pyramid General Manager Todd Johnson told the Missoulian on Friday that one group has made a proposal to keep the company in business, and a couple more investors still have interest as well. Johnson said Pyramid Mountain Lumber is reviewing all the interested groups, but will not make a final decision until the May 15 deadline to find a buyer. The mill has some wiggle room for a couple weeks after that date in case of last-minute changes to proposals.

Read More

Data: Industrial plant in Missoula emits hundreds of tons of air pollutants each year

By David Erickson
The Missoulian
April 26, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US West

Missoula, Montana — The Roseburg Forest Products plant in Missoula emits hundreds of tons of pollutants into the air every year, including carbon monoxide, ammonia, sulfur dioxide, particulate matter and volatile organic compounds, according to records from the Montana Department of Environmental Quality. The large factory on Missoula’s Northside near Interstate 90, which makes particleboard, was built in 1969. Roseburg Forest Products, based in Oregon, purchased the plant from Louisiana-Pacific in 2003. The plant employs about 150 workers. Earlier this spring, Roseburg Forest Products announced that the facility is closing for good in late May due to Roseburg’s decision to exit the particleboard manufacturing business and focus on other products. All the workers will lose their jobs and there has been no indication that the plant will be sold to a new operator. The Missoulian requested and received the emissions reports from 2022 and 2023 from the Montana DEQ for the Roseburg facility in Missoula.

Read More

Montana launches tool to help lumber industry workers impacted by closures

NBC Montana
April 26, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US West

HELENA, Montana — Montana is launching a new tool to help lumber industry workers affected by recent mill closures. The Department of Labor and Industry alongside Gov. Greg Gianforte launched a new Skills Online Matching Dashboard online. The Dashboard connects specific skills from lumber industry jobs with other professions, like railroad conductor or transportation inspector. …Governor Greg Gianforte and Department of Labor Commissioner Sarah Swanson announced a new tool. …The Skills Matching Dashboard, created by the DLI economist team, identifies the specific skills required in several jobs in the lumber industry and matches those skills to other professions. The governor added, “Our mills need greater certainty from the federal government. While the industry navigates ongoing challenges, we will continue looking for opportunities to create an environment to support this historic industry and its workers.”

Read More

Governor Dunleavy Proposes Tax Relief for Alaska Agriculture and Timber Businesses

Office of Mike Dunleavy, Governor
April 26, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US West

Mike Dunleavy

ALASKA — Governor Mike Dunleavy introduced legislation to support Alaska’s agriculture and timber industries. HB 399 / SB 265 reduces the tax burden of businesses in the agriculture and timber industry in Alaska. The bill exempts certain agriculture and timber businesses from state and local income, property, and sales tax for a period of 10 years. …“Alaska has a vested interest in ensuring a robust agricultural and timber economy. Tax relief is a proven and responsible incentive to stimulate growth and will thereby help Alaska become more self-sufficient for food and lumber.” The tax exemption would apply to businesses that produce at least $25,000 a year in agriculture or timber products. The tax exemption would go into effect on January 1, 2025 and would be in place until January 1, 2035.

Read More

Missoula legislators ask state to help with lumber mill closings

By Laura Lundquist
The Missoula Current
April 29, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US West

MISSOULA, Montana — With less than three weeks to find a buyer for a Seeley lumber mill, some Missoula legislators are asking the state land board for some leadership in keeping the mill open. On Monday, three Democratic legislators sent a letter to the five members of the Montana Land Board, asking them to help preserve existing lumber mills after two in Missoula County have announced they’re shutting down. “Absent a viable timber industry, the ability of the State to manage its lands and produce revenue will be severely compromised,” the legislators wrote. In mid-March, Pyramid Mountain Lumber in Seeley Lake announced it was closing after 75 years. Although Roseburg Forest Products won’t reopen, the owners of Pyramid Mountain Lumber are considering selling their business instead of shutting it all down. 

Read More

Wine Country fire threat spreads to insurance coverage

By Susan Wood
The North Bay Business Journal
April 25, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US West

Two North Bay congressmen, U.S. Reps. Mike Thompson, D-St. Helena, and Jared Huffman, D-San Rafael, said Thursday they don’t want homeowners and renters coping with the concern of wildfires and balking insurance companies to get burned twice. In a press conference Thursday, they discussed disaster resilience legislation introduced at the end of last month. The lawmakers gathered with a group that included local government officials and real estate and construction industry experts to take on “the surge of insurance companies pulling out of the California market”. California’s largest insurer, State Farm, chose to not renew 72,000 home and apartment insurance policies. State Farm wasn’t the only insurer to pull back coverage. …If passed, HR 7849, the Disaster Resiliency and Coverage Act of 2024, will provide a program through state governments that offers $10,000 in grants for home hardening improvements. …The situation may also cause builders to hesitate to provide housing at a time when the region needs it….

Read More

Mill closures ‘shock’ industry, but officials say demand for wood remains

By Justin Franz
Montana Free Press
April 22, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US West

Since 1990, about three dozen mills have closed in western Montana, a list that will soon include Pyramid Mountain Lumber in Seeley Lake and Roseburg Forest Products in Missoula, both of which announced plans to shutter within a week of each other last month. …Paul McKenzie, vice president and general manager of F.H. Stoltze Land & Lumber Co. in Columbia Falls said in 2023, the company got about 70% of its wood from national forest land — the most it had gotten from that source in years — but that amount was going to be significantly less this year. …Stoltze is also looking for ways to expand its business. A few years ago, the company established a new branch called Stoltze Timber Systems, which produces pre-fabricated structures using cross-laminated timber. Such construction is appealing to a lumber mill like Stoltze because it allows it to use smaller trees that in the past had little use. 

Read More

Canfor buying Resolute’s El Dorado lumber mill for $73 million

The Magnolia Reporter
May 2, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

Canfor is buying the Resolute El Dorado Inc. lumber manufacturing facility on the Junction City Highway in Union County, south of El Dorado. Canfor said the $73 million acquisition, including working capital, will create synergies and vertical integration opportunities given its fit with Canfor’s existing operations in Union County… and with an anticipated further $50 million in planned upgrades, production capacity is expected to increase to 175 million board feet per year. “The El Dorado mill is an important part of the regional forest ecosystem. Together with Canfor’s adjacent El Dorado Laminating Plant and nearby Urbana Plant, this acquisition aligns with our growth-focused strategy in areas with access to high-quality globally competitive timber supply,” said Lee Goodloe, president, Canfor Southern Pine. …The transaction is expected to close over the next several months and is subject to customary closing conditions. The lumber and decking mill produces 147 million board feet annually. It has 102 employees.

Read More

Twin Rivers Paper sells Pine Bluff Arkansas based paper mill to American Kraft Paper Industries

Twin Rivers Paper Company
April 30, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

MADAWASDKA, Maine — Twin Rivers Paper Company, a producer of specialty paper products, announced the sale of its Pine Bluff, Arkansas unbleached kraft paper mill to American Kraft Paper Industries, an affiliate of American Industrial Acquisition Corporation (AIAC). Terms of the transaction were not disclosed. Twin Rivers Paper acquired the Pine Bluff kraft paper manufacturing and distribution business from the Mondi Group in 2018. “The decision to sell the Pine Bluff mill furthers Twin Rivers’ strategy of prioritizing the growth of our core specialty papers business,” stated Tyler Rajeski, President of Twin Rivers Paper. “With AIAC’s founding principle of investing in the assets it acquires, we are confident the Pine Bluff business and its dedicated managers and employees will realize long-term success. 

Read More

Domtar fined $64,650 for water permit violations

By Jeff Keeling
WJHL Tennessee
April 24, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

KINGSPORT, Tennessee — The Tennessee Department of Environment and Conservation has fined Domtar $64,650 for violating its water discharge permit multiple times in the months following startup of its new Kingsport recycled packaging facility. The company can avoid paying nearly $52,000 of the penalty if it submits an acceptable “corrective action plan” and meets milestones designed to ensure compliance. …TDEC staff began investigating “multiple complaints of a white slime in the stream” from outfalls into the South Fork Holston River as early as March 31, 2023. Domtar began operating its new plant Jan. 15, 2023. …Testing showed that “biochemical oxygen demand” levels exceeded permit effluent levels in February and March, 2023. East Tennessee State University biology professor Joe Bidwell said any impacts on “resident organisms” were probably mitigated by the type of water the effluent was entering. 

 

Read More

Louisiana Pacific’s Houlton siding plant seeks new air emissions license

By Kathleen Phalen Tomaselli
Bangor Daily News
April 22, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: United States, US East

NEW LIMERICK, Maine — A wood siding manufacturer is filing a new air emissions license application with the state so it can add another line of finish products at its Houlton-area mill. Louisiana-Pacific will file the application with the Maine Department of Environmental Protection on May 3, LP spokeswoman Breeanna Straessle said. Details about the new emissions and their effect on the environment will not be made public until the filing. The new finish will not result in making more products or hiring more employees, according to Straessle. “It is not about capacity. It’s about making a different type of product. Our siding has a cedar finish, this new finish will make a smooth finish with a different texture on the siding,” she said. The Louisiana-Pacific mill, located about five miles outside Houlton, employs approximately 150 people in the area.

Read More

Japan groups eye online market to promote use of domestic lumber

The Japan Times
April 26, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: International

Japanese forestry and lumber industry groups are setting their sights on an initiative to establish an online market for trading trees before they are cut down. With human-made forests in Japan, which constitute about 40% of the nation’s forested areas, entering full-scale harvest seasons, the process of “reforestation,” or planting new saplings after tree felling, has faced obstacles, primarily stemming from the considerable burdens placed on forest owners. The objective of the proposed market is to establish prices that account for reforestation expenses, thereby giving individuals greater incentive to be involved in forestry management and promoting the utilization of domestic lumber. …The council, a general incorporated association, was established by six industry groups. The aim of the proposal is to implement a system where forest owners can set desired prices for their trees, provided that they commit to reforestation efforts after logging.

Read More

Epson plans its first biomass plant in Japan

Bioenergy Insight Magazine
April 24, 2024
Category: Business & Politics
Region: International

Epson has announced it is planning the construction of the company’s first biomass power plant in Japan. Epson hopes to have the plant in operation by 2027. The plant will provide Epson with self-generated renewable electricity on a continual basis and reduce the ratio of electricity the company purchases from external power companies, thereby promoting wider public adoption of renewable electricity. …The electricity generated will be sold to the market under a feed-in premium (FIP) scheme and Epson will convert the electricity that it uses into renewable electricity by leveraging the environmental value created through power generation. Moreover, the power is expected to be supplied to local facilities in the event of a disaster or other emergency. …By utilising wood and bark from neglected forests, Epson said it will also be contributing to forest maintenance.

Read More